Southern Sudan Association
The Southern Sudan Association was a London-based organization of southern Sudanese exiles and refugees. The SSA was founded in 1970 to build support in Europe for humanitarian assistance to southern Sudanese by publicizing the Sudan Government's attacks on its citizens, suffering in southern Sudan, and the epidemics that were rife there. Brian MacDermot served as the chairman of the SSA. The director of the Southern Sudan Association was Enoch Mading de Garang.
Advocacy and role in the Addis Ababa Agreement (1972)
The Southern Sudan Association was an important center of southern Sudanese intellectual and political activity in London throughout the early 1970s. Many exiles who later rose to prominence in southern Sudan during the 1970s and 1980s worked there or volunteered during the evenings. These included Antiok Athuai Lual Athuai, the "distribution manager" for Grass Curtain , and , who served as "secretary treasurer" for the SSA and sat on the editorial board of the Grass Curtain.The SSA was closely linked to Anya Nya and the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement. Enoch Mading de Garang, a founding member of the SSA, its director, and editor-in-chief of Grass Curtain, was an official representative in Europe of the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement. SSA members traveled and delivered lectures and met with religious and human rights organizations to advocate on behalf of southern Sudan. The SSA published the Grass Curtain and issued press releases about human rights violations and epidemics in southern Sudan.
The Southern Sudan Association played an important early role in putting into place many of the connections that led, ultimately, to the Addis Ababa Agreement (1972), which ended the First Sudanese Civil War. The SSA mobilized support among southern Sudanese refugees and helped to bring together several parties that would eventually meet in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. These were the Southern Sudanese in exile and those supporting Anya Nya in Sudan, representatives of the Sudan Government and those of Anya Nya and the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement, and the All Africa Conference of Churches and World Council of Churches.